Satsop Hills

Satsop Hills

Logged hill, foreground, and peaks rising above fog in Satsop Hills
Highest point
Peak Rock Peak
Elevation 3,294 ft (1,004 m)[1]
Coordinates 47°24′17″N 123°22′54″W / 47.40472°N 123.38167°W / 47.40472; -123.38167
Geography

Location of the Satsop Hills

Country United States
State Washington
Region Western Washington
Range coordinates 47°22′N 123°27′W / 47.37°N 123.45°W / 47.37; -123.45Coordinates: 47°22′N 123°27′W / 47.37°N 123.45°W / 47.37; -123.45
Parent range Olympic Mountains

The Satsop Hills are foothills of the Olympic Mountains in Mason County, Washington north of Matlock, Washington, between Wynoochee Lake to the west and Lake Cushman to the east.[2]

Geography

Inset map showing Satsop Hills in context of the Olympic Peninsula. Map by Erwin Raisz in 1941, predating creation of Wynoochee Dam and lake.[2]

The Satsop River, with a 300-square-mile (780 km2) watershed, rises in the hills and flows south to the Chehalis River.[3] Where the river rises, 160 inches (4,100 mm) of annual precipitation qualifies as a temperate rainforest, a term used applied by some publications to the Satsop watershed.[3][4][5] The Wynoochee Oxbow meteorological station on the west end of the hills (47°17′57″N 123°39′07″W / 47.29917°N 123.65194°W / 47.29917; -123.65194 (Wynoochee Oxbow)) has both the highest average annual rainfall and the second highest ever recorded in the continental United States.[6][7] The hills lie partly in the Olympic National Forest but not quite in the Olympic National Park. In a 1916 geological survey, hills in the vicinity of Matlock were included with the Black Hills of Thurston County, but may have been describing formations on the East Fork of the Satsop, to the south of the area described above.[8][9]

Peaks

Peaks in the Satsop Hills include:[10]

Name Height Location Fire lookout?
Dusk Point3201 feet47°24′40″N 123°28′08″W / 47.411°N 123.469°W / 47.411; -123.469 (Dusk Point)Yes[11]
Grisdale Hill1446 feet47°22′23″N 123°17′56″W / 47.373°N 123.299°W / 47.373; -123.299 (Grisdale Hill)1940s[12]
Rock Peak3294 feet[1]47°24′17″N 123°22′54″W / 47.40472°N 123.38167°W / 47.40472; -123.38167 (Rock Peak)
South Mountain2903 feet47°18′43″N 123°22′16″W / 47.312°N 123.371°W / 47.312; -123.371 (South Mountain)1956–1976[13]

History

Further information: Yacolt Burn

Forest fires have struck the hills repeatedly. The term "Satsop hills" has been used at least since 1885 when the Morning Oregonian used it to describe the location of forest fires.[14]

In September, 1902, "catastrophic" fires burned across Southwest Washington, including a burn from Elma to Shelton on Puget Sound that destroyed one million board feet of lumber at a mill in the hills above Elma, and uncounted volumes of live trees. On September 12, the county seat, Montesano experienced darkness at noon. A one- to two-mile wide swath of timber was completely burned from Elma to Summit Lake, 13 miles west.[15]

Several fire lookouts were built on peaks in the 20th century as listed above as part of a national effort to control fires.

Fugitive John Tornow

The hills were the hideout of John Tornow, a fugitive who lived in the hills for 19 months in the 1910s. He was accused of murdering several people including two cousins, and was eventually found and killed there by the then Chehalis County sheriff's deputy in 1913.[16][17][18]

Transportation

The hills are crossed by extensive logging roads and an abandoned logging railroad formerly operated by Simpson Timber Company.[19][20] The Vance Creek Railroad Bridge, 347 feet (106 m)[21] above Vance Creek (47°20′04″N 123°19′17″W / 47.33444°N 123.32139°W / 47.33444; -123.32139), was the highest railroad bridge in the United States.[22]

Wildlife

Deer and Roosevelt Elk herds are in the hills, as well as black bear, cougars and game birds including grouse and "the largest population of mountain quail in the state". Elk are probably migratory and move in and out of the Olympic National Park.[23][24]

Sasquatch are reported to live in the hills, with 22 reported sightings as of 2014,[25] including a case discovered by a sheriff's deputy in 1982 and investigated by an Idaho State University biologist in 2004.[26]

Recreation

Satsop River west fork

Recreation in the hills includes canoeing and kayaking, camping, fishing, hunting and hiking.[23][27][28][29][30] Schafer State Park, part of the Washington State Parks system, is on the Satsop River in the low hills at an altitude of 125 feet (38 m);[31] Truman Glick County Park (35 acres (14 ha)) is along the abandoned railroad on the southern side of the hills.[19][32] Hiking destinations noted in printed and online guides include Satsop Lakes (47°25′25″N 123°30′37″W / 47.42361°N 123.51028°W / 47.42361; -123.51028),[28] Spoon Creek Falls,[33][34] South Mountain, a 3,044-foot (928 m) "moderately well known winter hiking destination" in Mason County,[35][36] and Vance Creek Bridge, "made famous from millions of Instagram, Facebook, Tumblr and Twitter images" and though on closed private land, was "one of the more popular destinations on the Olympic Peninsula".[20]

The Grays Harbor County high point, a 4,880-foot (1,490 m) peak unofficially named Wynoochee Point, is sought by highpointing enthusiasts; it is on the Grays Harbor–Mason County line in the Satsop Hills or nearby in the adjacent Wynoochee watershed (47°29′42″N 123°30′22″W / 47.49500°N 123.50611°W / 47.49500; -123.50611).[37][38][39]

References

Notes
  1. 1 2 U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Rock Peak
  2. 1 2 Raisz 1989.
  3. 1 2 Smith & Wenger 2001, p. 43.
  4. Landers 2008, p. 161.
  5. Alaska Coastal Rainforest Center 2013, p. 1.
  6. Ahrens 2008, p. 357.
  7. NOAA 1999.
  8. Weaver 1916, p. 137 "The north limits [of the Black Hills] would then extend as far as Hoodsport on Hood Canal. The western limits would extend from Hoodsport southwesterly to Matlock and thence to McCleary ... [I]n the vicinity of Matlock they form a low divide between the Puget Sound basin and Grays Harbor. From Matlock the elevation of this divide gradually increases and soon merges into a high rugged spur of the Olympic Mountains..."
  9. Schuster 2005.
  10. Topographic Map Summit Features in Mason County, Washington, TopoZone
  11. http://www.firelookout.com/wa/duskpeak.html
  12. http://www.firelookout.com/wa/grisdalehill.html
  13. http://www.firelookout.com/wa/southmtn.html
  14. Morning Oregonian 1885 "Heavy fires are raging in Mason County. At Shelton's Point the loggers are fighting it. Opposite that point Willey has had to remove his camp. Men are on watch along the Satsop railroad to prevent the fire from burning the logs, of which there are several hundred thousand feet. On the Satsop hills heavy fires are running, and large numbers of elk have been driven down in consequence." (emphasis added)
  15. Tacoma Public Library 2004.
  16. Gibson 2001, p. 36 he lived on "a homestead on the upper Satsop River"
  17. Lindstrom 2014.
  18. Van Syckle 1982 "two quick shots slammed through the Satsop hills and the two boys were dead"
  19. 1 2 Hawthorn 2003.
  20. 1 2 Milliman 2014.
  21. "Vance Creek Bridge". HighestBridges.com. Eric Sakowski. 10 December 2009. Archived from the original on 12 September 2016. Retrieved 1 November 2016.
  22. Marshall 1981.
  23. 1 2 WDFW 2014 "Elk in GMU 636 can primarily be found in the upper Wynoochee River valley, the Skokomish River valley, and near the town of Matlock, WA. Although some herds remain non-migratory, we have documented migratory movement from the upper Wynoochee to the Olympic National Parkand the North Fork Skokomish River at Lake Cushman, as well as movement up the South Fork Skokomish river valley into the Olympic National Park."
  24. Beerbower 2014.
  25. Grays Harbor Tourism 2014.
  26. Meldrum 2004.
  27. Landers 2008, pp. 159–163.
  28. 1 2 Forest Service 2014.
  29. Washington State Parks 2009.
  30. Smith & Wenger 2001, p. 29.
  31. "Schafer State Park". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2014-11-03.
  32. Mason County Parks 2014.
  33. Romano 2007, p. 114.
  34. Wood 2010, p. 242.
  35. "South Mountain". SummitPost.org. Retrieved 2014-11-03.
  36. "South Mountain". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 2014-11-03.
  37. Roper 1994.
  38. Slayden 2004.
  39. Wolcott 1961.
Sources
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